Ex Parte Lincoln Gas & Electric Light Co.

256 U.S. 512, 41 S. Ct. 558, 65 L. Ed. 1066, 1921 U.S. LEXIS 1581
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 1, 1921
Docket29
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 256 U.S. 512 (Ex Parte Lincoln Gas & Electric Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Lincoln Gas & Electric Light Co., 256 U.S. 512, 41 S. Ct. 558, 65 L. Ed. 1066, 1921 U.S. LEXIS 1581 (1921).

Opinion

*513 Me. Justice Pitney

delivered the opinion of the court.

Following our decision in Lincoln Gas & Electric Light Co. v. City of Lincoln, June 2, 1919, 250 U. S. 256, our mandate went down to the District Court of thte United States for the District of Nebraska, reciting our determination that its decree of September 23, 1915, should be modified as indicated in the opinion, and as so modified should be affirmed with costs; and proceeding as follows: “You, therefore, are hereby commanded that 'such execution and proceedings be had in said cause as according to right and justice, and the. laws of the United States, ought to be had, the said appeal notwithstanding.”

Upon the filing of this mandate, the District Court, on January 6,1920, entered an order modifying its decree of September 23, 1915, as particularly Vequired, and, at the same time, made an order retaining jurisdiction for the purpose of requiring the company to make refund and restitution to consumers of gas for all amounts collected over and above the legal rate pending the litigation, with interest, in accordance with the terms of a bond that the company had filed in the cause in order to obtain a supersedeaé, with a continuance of injunction, pending its appeal from the decree of September 23, 1915. An appeal from the order retaining jurisdiction, taken by the company to this court, was dismissed because the order lacked finality. 253 U. S. 477. The mandate upon the dismissal again commanded the District Court “that such proceedings be had in said cause, as according to right and justice, and the laws of the United States, ought to be had,' the said appeal notwithstanding.” This having gone down, the court appointed a master, with direction to examine the books and accounts of the company and prepare an account of the amounts paid by consumers in excess of the ordinance rates during the pendency of any restraining order or injunction in the *514 cause; with other provisions hot necessary to.be mentioned.

The company applied to this court, obtained leave for the pulpóse, and filed a petition for a writ of mandamus to command the judge of the District Court to nullify and revoke the above mentioned orders and refrain from assuming jurisdiction over the'cause as aforesaid. An order to show cause was issued, proper return thereto made by the judge, and the matter has been argued.

From the petition and return the following additional particulars, appear: The original suit was commeniced December 27> 1906, in the United States Circuit (now District) Court, by the company against the. city and its officials as. defendants seeking (among other things) to enjoin the enforcement of an ordinance regulating the price to be charged for gas. At the outset a restraining order was obtained, and this was followed by a temporary injunction, continued in force until final decree, and after-wards, pending an appeal to this court (223 U. S. 349), under a bond conditioned to account for overcharges if the rate ordinance should be sustained. After this first appeal, the litigation was continued until September 23, 1915, when the District Court made a final decree .sustaining the rate ordinance and dismissing the bill. An application for allowance of ah appeal to this, court, with a supersedeas to keep the injunction in effect, was granted November 22, 1915, upon approval of a supersedeas bond tendered by the company, for./the purpose, in the penal sum of $575,000, to be paid to the clerk of the District Court for the benefit of all, gas consumers who had purchased gas from the company during the pendency of the action from its commencement, and all consumers who should purchase gas thereafter until the final determination of the suit; with a condition reciting the décree of September 23, 1915, and the temporary injunction theretofore, granted to restrain the putting into effect *515 of the rate ordinance, and providing that if the company should prosecute its appeal to effect, or failing to make its appeal good should answer all costs and damages and refund ah' overcharges collected from gas consumers above the price fixed by said ordinance, and should pay to the clerk of the District Court or his successor in office, for the benefit of all whom it might concern and in particular for the benefit of all consumers entitled to refunds, all overcharges collected since the granting of the original injunction, together with interest thereon, when the several parties lawfully entitled and the amount of refund, due to each should have.been ascertained in the action in such manner as the court should direct, the determination to be binding upon all parties to the bond, then the obligation should be void, 'otherwise to remain in force.

This appeal resulted in our decision of June 2, 1919, affirming the decree, with two modifications, one of which related to an occupation tax that was under attack in the same suit, but is not now material; the other was, to cause the dismissal of the suit as to the rate ordinance to be without prejudice, to the commencement of a new action thereafter to restrain enforcement of the ordinance if it'could be shown to be confiscatory in its effect under the new conditions. .

Thus it. appears that, during the entire course of this protracted litigation (except for a period when the company put the prescribed rate into effect as a test), the operation of the ordinance was suspended at the instance of the company, upon terms obliging it and its surety to refund all overcharges. should it fail to make good its attack upon the established rate, and binding it to abide by the determination of the court in the same cause as to the amounts due, and pay the entire amount thus ascertained, with interest, to the clerk of the court, for the benefit of the consumers. According to the coin *516 pany’s own statement, its books showing the accounts between it and its customers during the period from 1906 to 1920 contain more than 25,000 accounts, which are involved and complicated by other charges, so that an examination of them would involve much time and expense.

The principal contention upon which the petition for mandamus is rested is that, under our mandate following the decision of June 2, 1919, and the more recent one on dismissal of the subsequent appeal, no jurisdiction was conferred upon the District Court to take any action except to affirm its decree of September 23, 1915, dismissing the bill of complaint, after modifying the decree in the two particulars specified. It is said that, after an appeal, the court below has jurisdiction to proceed only in conformity with the direction of the mandate of the appellate court. This may be conceded. But here our mandate expressly commanded “that such execution and proceedings be had in said cause as according to right and justice, and the laws of the United States, ought to be had, the said appeal notwithstanding.” Of course, whatever proceedings were taken thereafter in the same cause would be further

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Bluebook (online)
256 U.S. 512, 41 S. Ct. 558, 65 L. Ed. 1066, 1921 U.S. LEXIS 1581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-lincoln-gas-electric-light-co-scotus-1921.